Who Dat???!!!! :)
SAINTS WIN SuperBowl XLIV (44) Yaaaaaaayyyyyyy!
by cattails 31 Replies latest jw friends
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Think About It
Great win for the team, fans and city of New Orleans. Hope is a good thing.
P.S.....I never liked the Colts even when they were in Baltimore.
Think About It
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AK - Jeff
Being a good Hoosier, I am completely pissed...
Jeff
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JeffT
Some thoughts:
Unlike many years this was a really good game, at least it wasn't a blowout by halftime. I'm glad the Saints won, although between that and Mardi Gras I'm glad I'm not in the Big Easy tonight.
I was a huge fan of The Who (saw them in 1967). While some parts were good, I think tonight's show was proof they should have stopped a few years ago.
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miseryloveselders
Game was fixed, the same way the PAtriots won not that long after 9-11, the same way the Saints won not that long after Katrina. Makes for good articles in the newspaper that make people feel good.
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purplesofa
We had a big cookout, party and poker game afterwards so I missed most of the game and got none of the hafltime.
I'm really glad they won.
purps
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JRK
Congratulations to the Saints, that onside kick to start the second half was ballsy!
JK
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freydo
Super Bowl Sunday: Scientifically Crafted Mass Mental Illness
Infowars.com
February 8, 2010
As the Roman Empire drew to a close, the poet and satirist Juvenal wrote about an infantilized populace that had surrendered its birthright of political involvement.
Already long ago, from when we sold our vote to no man, the People have abdicated our duties,” he wrote, “for the People who once upon a time handed out military command, high civil office, legions — everything, now restrains itself and anxiously hopes for just two things: bread and circuses.” The Latin phrase panem et circenses is often translated as “bread and games.
In America, circa 2010, the phrase bread and circuses, or bread and games, has become what passes for our national anthem. The masses long ago abdicated their civic duties and have since forsaken the Constitution — and are in fact almost completely ignorant of it — and have abandoned their birthright of liberty in favor of mindless and indeed infantilized entertainment.
It is not merely the gladiatorial Super Bowl. It is an entire popular culture steeped in meaningless celebrity worship. Far too many Americans reject political involvement — their birthright — for a vicarious and perverse obsession with the minutiae of manufactured stars and starlets. It is no mistake Aldous Huxley used the phrase in Brave New World Revisited as an example of one of the ideas he used as a theme in Brave New World. Steve Bonta, in an article published in The New American, compares and contrasts Huxley and Orwell:
"What Huxley understood more acutely than Orwell is that it is easier to enslave a people by seduction than by coercion. In the words of social critic Neil Postman, “what Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one…. As Huxley remarked…, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny ‘failed to take into account man’s almost infinite appetite for distractions.’ In 1984, Huxley added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure.”
The Super Bowl event is a scientifically created mass mental illness that exploits man’s almost infinite appetite for distractions. It is the bellwether of tyranny.
In the video below, Alex Jones calls on each of us to remember what really matters on this Super Bowl weekend. Forget the pizza, nachos and the half-time musicians and educate yourself, your family and your neighbors on what the globalists have done by design to our culture and our very humanity.
It is more than a football game. It is a primary example of the fact the future of humanity hangs in the balance.
http://www.prisonplanet.com/super-bowl-sunday-scientifically-crafted-mass-mental-illness.html -
DaCheech
i'm not a saints nor colts fan, but this was definetely #2 on my list of best superbowls